Fifth Circuit Strips Immunity From Cops Who Ended A Mental Health Crisis By Restraining A Man To Death
from the unfortunately-it-took-a-death-to-obtain-this-result dept
The Fifth Circuit is the worst place to bring a civil rights lawsuit against law enforcement officers. But that may slowly be changing, thanks in part to the Supreme Court, which has played its own part in making qualified immunity an almost insurmountable obstacle in civil cases. Over the past few months, the Supreme Court has reversed and remanded two cases handled by the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals, ruling that the lower court's extension of qualified immunity was the incorrect conclusion.
This case [PDF] may reflect the Supreme Court's qualified immunity attitude adjustment. Or it just may be that there's no excusing what happened here: a man suffering a mental health crisis being helped to death by San Antonio (TX) police officers.
Jesse Aguirre was reported to dispatchers by drivers on a heavily traveled eight-lane highway. Drivers noted Aguirre seemed to be "mentally disturbed" and possibly in danger of being injured or killed since he was walking on the thin media strip dividing the eight lanes of traffic. Officers arrived at the scene and things just kept getting worse for Aguirre. Fortunately, it was all documented by the dashcam on an officer's vehicle.
Here's the first "offer" of "help" Aguirre received from a police officer:
Officer Gonzales was the first to arrive. She left her vehicle blocking the left-most eastbound lane and approached Aguirre on foot with her firearm pointed at him, ordering him to “come here” and threatening, “I’m going to shoot you, m-----r-f----r.”
Lovely. Gonzales continued to walk after Aguirre, joined by Officer Morgan (also pointing a gun) and Mendez (pointing a Taser). Aguirre then stopped and placed his hands on the concrete median barrier. All three officers rushed Aguirre, grabbing him and placing him in handcuffs. According to the video, Aguirre did not "visibly resist" being handcuffed. The officers then tossed the handcuffed man over the cement barrier, causing him to land on his head.
More officers arrived. And they apparently felt the unresisting man needed more "assistance" dealing with his apparent mental health crisis.
After one or two more officers arrived, they assisted in moving Aguirre from the car hood to the ground onto his stomach next to the median with his hands still cuffed behind him. The video does not show that Aguirre resisted during this maneuver, but instead that he stumbled with the Officers toward the median. After Aguirre was placed prone on his stomach, Officer Gonzales pushed his legs up and crossed them near his buttocks and kneeled forward on Aguirre’s legs, holding them near Aguirre’s bound hands in a hog-tie-like position. Officer Mendez knelt with one knee on the ground and the other on Aguirre’s back, later changing position to hold Aguirre’s shoulders and cheek down against the pavement with his hands. Officer Mendez testified that he was using part of his body weight to hold Aguirre down, thus applying pressure to Aguirre’s back and neck. Officers Morgan and Arredondo then joined Gonzales and Mendez, placing their hands on Aguirre’s arms and back to hold him prone in the maximal-restraint position.
More officers arrived, including a supposed "medical tech officer" (Benito Juarez) but there's nothing on video suggesting he handed out any medical advice or paid any attention to the handcuffed man's condition. One officer noted Aguirre's lips were turning blue but chalked that up to "drug use," rather than the ongoing asphyxiation that was actually occurring.
Aguirre remained hogtied face-down on the pavement for more than five minutes. At some point during that time he stopped breathing, but it was only noticed by the large group of officers after he had spent five-and-a-half minutes in that position. Once they realized he had stopped breathing, the officers turned Aguirre over and the "medical tech officer" jogged off to get some medical equipment.
But no one really seemed to care.
At this point, the Officers appear to be in good spirits; according to the Plaintiffs, in the dashcam videos, Juarez can be seen smiling as he jogs to his vehicle, and several other Officers likewise appear to be smiling and laughing as they await Juarez’s return around Aguirre’s body. Juarez returned at a walk with his medical bag approximately one minute after he left.
It wasn't until more than four more minutes had elapsed that any officer attempted to perform CPR. But it was too late. Aguirre was dead. The autopsy report confirmed what the dashcams had caught: the restraint method had asphyxiated Aguirre. The conclusion: "due to restraint by police, this case is classified as a homicide."
Despite this direct link between their actions and Aguirre's death, the officers wanted qualified immunity. The court refuses to extend it. The amount of force used to restrain Aguirre was excessive. The situation did not call for maximal restraint of a cooperative subject, especially given the criminal act (which is still a stretch) at the center of it.
Defendants do not attempt to show that the severity of any crime committed by Aguirre weighed in favor of the level of force used by the Defendant Officers. In fact, defendants do not articulate any criminal investigatory function justifying their actions, and instead rely on the existence of a threat to the public safety—namely, the potential danger to motorists and himself that Aguirre’s mental disturbance and walking along the median of the eight-lane highway caused. At most, the crime at issue was a traffic offense.
[...]
This factor thus weighs against it being reasonable or necessary to place Aguirre in the maximal-restraint position for over five minutes.
And the cops can't swing the court their way by providing testimony that was often directly contradicted by their own dashcam recording.
In their declarations below, the Defendant Officers stated that Aguirre was resisting and they feared that he would break away and run into traffic, causing a dangerous collision and potentially dragging one of the Officers with him. But the Plaintiffs’ summary judgment evidence and this court’s own review of the video evidence at minimum raise genuine questions about whether it was objectively reasonable to believe Aguirre was actively resisting or even physically capable of posing an immediate safety threat that would justify the Defendant Officers in using extraordinarily dangerous force by placing and holding him in the prone maximal-restraint position that led to his death.
The court also points out that the fact the officers suspected Aguirre had recently used drugs should have resulted in more caution being taken while restraining him, rather than less. Even the go-to excuse for in-custody deaths -- "excited delirium" -- is supported by plenty of documentation that shows hog tying suspects or holding them down with body weight increases the risk of death.
But at the end of it, the thing that undoes these officers' planned exit from this lawsuit is their own video. The court brings it up again in support of its qualified immunity denial.
Although the Officers presented their own version of events that included claims of Aguirre’s resistance—including, for example that he “was resisting and trying to pull away from” the Officers while walking near the westbound side of the median, “was still resisting” when placed on the hood of the car, and “continued to resist by shifting his body around and trying to break free” while pinned against the hood of the patrol car—these averments in contravention of what the police dashcam videos show do no more than reinforce that genuine disputes as to material facts exist at this stage of the litigation.
Clearly established enough, adds the Fifth, even without a case directly on point. The difference between "hog tying" and "maximal prone restraint" isn't enough to make it unclear to these "reasonable" officers whether the use of these nearly identical techniques in situations like this would be "excessive."
Whether or not the Supreme Court's recent hints nudged this in the right direction, at least the correct conclusion was reached: restraining someone to death -- especially an unresisting someone -- clearly violates their rights.
Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
Techdirt is one of the few remaining truly independent media outlets. We do not have a giant corporation behind us, and we rely heavily on our community to support us, in an age when advertisers are increasingly uninterested in sponsoring small, independent sites — especially a site like ours that is unwilling to pull punches in its reporting and analysis.
While other websites have resorted to paywalls, registration requirements, and increasingly annoying/intrusive advertising, we have always kept Techdirt open and available to anyone. But in order to continue doing so, we need your support. We offer a variety of ways for our readers to support us, from direct donations to special subscriptions and cool merchandise — and every little bit helps. Thank you.
–The Techdirt Team
Filed Under: 5th circuit, jesse aguirre, mental health, police, qualified immunity, san antonio, texas
Reader Comments
Subscribe: RSS
View by: Time | Thread
Screw civil court, what about a murder charge?
Why haven't these cops been charged with murder? From the description, that's what happened.
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Re: Screw civil court, what about a murder charge?
I'd imagine that charges will be coming along soon
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Re: Screw civil court, what about a murder charge?
Hopefully the mention of homicide in the filing means that's coming.
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Re: Screw civil court, what about a murder charge?
What about perjury, making false statements or obstruction of justice? These are all things prosecutors love to threaten us little people with if they even think we're lying, but never the cops even when there's video evidence.
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Re: Re: Screw civil court, what about a murder charge?
Qualified immunity means that officers cannot be charged for perjury, making false statements or obstruction of justice if they could reasonably assume they could get away with it, and they have ample precedent for that assumption.
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Re: Re: Re: Screw civil court, what about a murder charge?
Um no QI only applies to civil suits. It has nothing to do with criminal prosecution.
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Thanks for serving
every time i read one of these stories i think of The Onion artical/vid and think they should be tried as a 300 lb black man with tattoos. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=84phU8of02U
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
The more things change...
How utterly messed up is it that I watched that and it was only after reading one of the comments that I realized it was posted a decade ago, and yet it is still relevant...
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Re: The more things change...
...and I have news for you, in that case; It could have been posted 50 years ago and still be relevant.
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
'We were having such a fine time until the footage showed up...'
Another perfect example of why police loathe cameras so much, as you can be damn sure that if there had been no cameras their description of events would have been taken as the truth and not a single one of them would have seen the inside of a court room on the defendant's side, dead suspect or no.
I would hope that the refusal to grant qualified immunity for murder will be swiftly followed by appropriate charges(some perjury charges would be fitting as well), though given that requires a prosecutor willing to go after a cop and those seem to be in short supply I'm not going to hold my breath.
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
murder
the story failed to mention that he was MURDERED in 2013! in 2015 they got "qualified immunity". and now the courts are finally getting around to denying QI.
so now for about 8 yrs these blue lie mafia criminals have enjoyed there freedom and most likely keeping there job.
since finally now they have lost QI maybe an investigation can be opened and murder charges filed!
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Cant reform this.
Yep.
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
"Officers presented their own version of events that included claims of Aguirre’s resistance"
I'm sorry, this wasn't a 5 yr old denying they took the cookie.
These are sworn officers lying on offical documents & providing false testimony.
Every case they EVER touched is now eligible for review as it is clear the have a real issue with the truth.
I told the man in the middle of a mental health crisis to, get over here I'm going to shoot you motherfucker, and they were SHOCKED just SHOCKED that the idea of being murdered by cops wasn't something that makes people move towards them.
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
"he was resisting"
Cops seem to be confusing 'resisting' with 'existing'. I've watch a number of videos where the cops are yelling 'stop resisting' over and over when it is obvious the suspect is not resisting in any way. They purposefully cause pain hoping the suspect responds so they can punish them further. Nothing short of a complete overhaul of police conduct will result in any significant changes.
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Re: "he was resisting"
Alternatively, because the suspect is being pulled about by more than one cop, it is the other cops that they detect resisting, but assume it is the suspect.,
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Re: "he was resisting"
Much like 'I feared for my life' 'stop resisting' are magic words when used by cops and they know it, because if a suspect is 'resisting' then suddenly they are much less restricted in how they can act as it's the suspect's fault for anything the police do after that point since if they'd just been nice and compliant the police wouldn't have had to do anything.
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Re: "he was resisting"
"They purposefully cause pain hoping the suspect responds so they can punish them further."
Which is why these excessive restraint situations are so horrible. When someone restricts your breathing to the point of danger you will instinctively try to prevent that from happening. Suffocation is a terrifying experience (see waterboarding) and your body will try to save you from it if it can. That natural response appears to be all the excuse officers need to make things even worse.
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
if a member of the public had done this, they would have been jailed with calls for them to get the death penalty! when it's a cop that does it, he gets pats on the back from colleagues, a promotion within the force and the right to carry on and do it again! niothing like having a good security force and this is NOTHING like having a good security force!
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Seems a bit unlikely
If we accept the commonly claimed premise that "most cops are good people" and that "it's only a few bad apples", then statistically speaking what are the chances that EVERY SINGLE COP present (five named but it sounds like more) would be completely indifferent to the homicide they were either participating in or witnessing? Is this really a "my lottery numbers came up" situation or is the premise a bit flawed?
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Re: Seems a bit unlikely
My observation is that 98 to 99% are rotten to the core and the rest have either been purged or terrified into silence.
[ link to this | view in chronology ]